Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick

Category: NCAA

Past Offered Clues about Now Failed Vikes-Cousins Deal

Posted on March 11, 2024March 11, 2024 by David Shama

 

The past provides insights into the likelihood of something happening in the future.  Hello, free agent quarterback Kirk Cousins and the Vikings.

News broke this afternoon Cousins is headed to the Falcons on a four-year deal. He and his representation have long been patient, savvy negotiators insistent on mega guaranteed multiyear deals including a no-trade provision.  They struck the jackpot in Atlanta.

The new contract is for $100 million in guaranteed money, per a story from Nick Shook of NFL.com.  The total deal is worth $180 million for the 35-year-old.

Kirk Cousins

Cousins and the Vikings were on record about mutual affection and respect for one another, but the last 10 months have hinted at limits with the partnership.  It was reported last May that despite Cousins having only the 2023 season remaining on his contract, an extension wasn’t imminent, and nothing ever was finalized.

It’s believed the Vikings were willing to offer guaranteed money for one or two more seasons.  Perhaps at $50 million per season.  Cousins had talked about finishing his career as a Viking and presumably wanted ownership and GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah to show maximum commitment, perhaps at least three guaranteed years and maybe consideration to play beyond then.

“After significant and positive dialogue with Kirk and his representatives, we were unable to reach agreement on a contract that fits the short and long-term visions for both Kirk and the Minnesota Vikings,” Mensah said in a prepared statement this afternoon. “Kirk holds a special place in Vikings history, and we appreciate his leadership and contributions to the team and the Minneapolis-St. Paul community over the past six seasons. We wish him, his wife, Julie, and their children all the best.

“Our approach heading into free agency always included layers of contingencies regarding the quarterback position. We are moving forward with plans that allow us to continue building a roster that can compete for a championship.”

Cousins got a dream deal from a team needing a quarterback to complement a roster that otherwise looks promising.  His wife Julie is a Georgia native and from the Atlanta area but that most certainly didn’t have much to do with Cousins moving on.  It’s a nice perk to play where the family has roots but that doesn’t drive deals of this magnitude.  This is all about the bucks and security.

The Falcons are taking a major gamble with their commitment to an aging quarterback.  Cousins, generally regarded as a top 12 NFL QB in recent years, had a remarkable stretch of playing without serious injury until he tore his right Achilles on October 29 last year and missed the last nine games of a season that resulted in the Vikings failing to make the playoffs.

There’s not much doubt Cousins will recover from his Achilles injury and be able to play next season.  However, think about his age and the pounding he has taken in 12 NFL seasons with first the Commanders and now the Vikings.  It’s clear an aging Cousins is more susceptible to injuries and being sidelined as the clock ticks toward his 40th birthday.

Cousins takes a risk too leaving the comfort zone he had with head coach Kevin O’Connell.  They spent two seasons together in the coach’s quarterback friendly environment and bonded.

Adofo-Mensah and the Vikings seem calculated and even cautious in contract negotiations.  Processes have been drawn out with not only Cousins but with superstar wide receiver Justin Jefferson and sack master Danielle Hunter.  Of the three, only Jefferson is a near lock to be with the club in 2024.

Worth Noting

Three of four players with Vikings ties top The Athletic’s list of the NFL’s best free agents.  Hunter is No. 1, Cousins No. 3 and former Vikings edge rusher Za’Darius Smith No. 4.  Giants running back Saquon Barkley is No. 2.

Media mogul Sid Hartman, who passed away in October of 2020, would be 104 this Friday, March 15.  Dave Mona, the longtime co-host of the WCCO Radio Sports Huddle program, reminded Sports Headliners the final show was on Hartman’s 100th birthday, March 15, 2020.

Hartman had an intense work ethic all his life and even in his final years was feisty, competitive and active on the local sports beat.  His professional life as a Star Tribune columnist and radio personality dominated his days until the pandemic shut down the state and changed his life.

“I still think it was COVID that killed him,” Mona said.  “Even though he didn’t have COVID, it ruined what he did, and he just couldn’t live under those circumstances.”

The Gophers basketball team split its two regular season games against Michigan State.  When the two clubs play in their opening Big Ten Tournament game Thursday morning at Target Center watch the number of shots near the basket and inside scoring.  The Spartans, under good-guy legendary coach Tom Izzo, have long been known for their aggressive play including inside the lane.  In a 76-66 win over Minnesota, the Spartans had 44 points to Minnesota’s 12 “inside the paint.”  When the Gophers won at home, 59-56, each team had 20.

Former University of Minnesota football player Jim Brunzell is organizing an early June tribute in the Twin Cities for former teammate Jim Carter who passed away last November.  Carter, who captained the 1969 Gophers, was a strong leader who stayed in touch with teammates, and he will be remembered fondly by them when they gather at a local venue on either June 3 or 10.

The U holds its annual Pro Day Thursday with the following 2023 Gophers expected to participate: Tyler Nubin, Brevyn Spann-Ford, Chris Autman-Bell, Corey Crooms Jr., Sean Tyler, Kyler Baugh, Tre’Von Jones, Chris Collins and Brady Weeks.

Twins’ owner Jim Pohlad turned 71 Sunday, March 10.

Comments Welcome

Nanne Steps Away from Mic But Comeback Possible

Posted on March 10, 2024 by David Shama

 

In the “never say never” category put this down: Lou Nanne, 82, might not have worked his last State High School Boys Hockey Tournament on local TV.

Multitudes assume Nanne retired last night after 60 years of providing entertaining tournament commentary as viewers watched Edina win the Class 2A championship against Chanhassen.  Except in 10 years or so, a great grandchild, or two or three, could be playing in the tournament and that could mean a comeback to the microphone.

“If they make it, I’ll come back and make a guest appearance,” Nanne told Sports Headliners.

And Dave Stead believes the man known as the Godfather of Minnesota hockey would be greeted with open arms.  “That would be great, and I think that he’d be welcomed to make that comeback,” said Stead who was the Minnesota State High School League’s executive director for 32 years.

Now retired, Stead plans to suggest the MSHL invite Nanne back to next year’s tournament and those that follow.  Encouraging the former Golden Gopher, Olympian and North Star to be in the press box and visible at the tournament is a winning idea. His name is synonymous with hockey including on the high school level where he has been an advocate for the ages.

“Minnesota hockey is fantastic and with Lou involved it just elevated it to a different level,” said Stead.  “When you heard the voice, you knew exactly what was happening at the hockey tournament.”

When family members played in the tournament for Edina High School, they created special memories during Nanne’s 60 years behind a microphone.  Son Marty scored the winning goal in the title game and years later his sons, Louie and Tyler, won championships.  “Those are the favorites (tourney memories),” Nanne said.

Nanne (right) with well-wisher Bill McReavy.

Nanne is a senior managing director for RBC, working with companies and labor unions.  He isn’t retiring from his position with the diversified financial services company, nor is he giving up his weekly guest appearances on KFAN Radio with drive time host Dan Barreiro, and he will continue into next season doing TV color work on a select number of Wild games.

Nanne won a battle with prostate cancer over 40 years ago. He goes to the gym multiple times per week, eats “what I want,” and is pleased with his health. “I got a great report from the Mayo (Clinic) last year.  Every year I go. Been going every year since ’87.”

So why retire from the state tournament gig? “I just think it’s time to move on.  Sixty is a nice round number.”

Asked several days ago what he anticipated his thoughts would be as he left the Xcel Energy Center last night, Nanne said: “Well, I feel sad that it’s over, but I am also happy that it’s over.  I think it’s the right time to do it.  I am going to treasure the moments that I had and think about all the good memories I had but know that it’s time to move on.”

Nanne was emotional last night as the crowd and even players paid tribute to his remarkable career including 60 years of analyzing tournament games.  It was a retirement scene that Hollywood might have scripted.

Yes, change happens to everyone, even Nanne who for nearly 25 years was the face of the North Stars franchise as a player, coach, GM and president.  Ironically, the man who grew up in Canada and lived most of his adult life in Minnesota never did like ice and cold.  He has become a Florida resident while spending many days in Minnesota and Wisconsin where the family has a lake home.

Lou Nanne doesn’t make many changes but when the time is right, he pulls the trigger, even taking up residence in sunny Florida.

Worth Noting

It could be one of two veteran right handers, either Seth Lugo or Michael Wacha, who will be the Royals’ opening day pitcher March 28 in Kansas City.  If so, left-handed hitting first baseman Alex Kirilloff is likely in the Twins’ lineup, with probably newly acquired switch hitting free agent Carlos Santana filling the DH spot.

Other probable Twins starters are left fielder Matt Wallner, center fielder Byron Buxton, right fielder Max Kepler, third baseman Royce Lewis, shortstop Carlos Correa, second baseman Eduardo Julien, catcher Ryan Jeffers and pitcher Pablo Lopez.

Do-Hyoung Park wrote a few days ago on MLB.com that Julien, who grew up speaking French in Quebec and went off to college at Auburn not knowing English, has become a popular player with teammates in his second season with the Twins.

If North St. Paul’s Louie Varland makes the Twins roster, he would be the third native Minnesotan on the 2024 roster along with Wallner and pitcher Caleb Thielbar.  He could also be the St. Paul Saints opening day starting pitcher.

Renovations to Xcel Energy Center remain a priority for the Wild with word that St. Paul mayor Melvin Carter is supportive.

The International Hockey Federation World Junior Hockey Championship will stage games in December of 2025 and January of 2026 at 3M Arena at Mariucci and Xcel Energy Center.  The event has been wildly popular on Canadian TV for years, annually drawing millions of viewers.

While the University of Minnesota basketball team has no certain NBA prospects, guard Cam Christie, a candidate for Freshman of the Year in the Big Ten, could inquire this spring if pro teams project him as draft worthy.   The smooth shooting guard, who is remindful of U All-American and former first round draft pick Lou Hudson, has the potential to improve his draft status next season.

Among regulars in the crowd at Williams Arena for Gophers games is former MLB umpire Tim Tschida, the St. Paul native.

The March issue of Sports Illustrated, writing about fragile coaching security in the NFL, points out there is not one offensive coordinator in the league who was with the same team in 2021.

Legendary Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz and former Gophers defensive coordinator Jay Sawvel, now head coach at Wyoming, will speak at next month’s Minnesota Football Coaches Association Clinic.  Speakers also include Gophers’ head coach P.J. Fleck and his assistants.  The April 4-6 clinic is held at the DoubleTree in St. Louis Park and on the U campus.

Comments Welcome

Caitlin Clark Stayed Home, Paige Bueckers Did Not

Posted on March 5, 2024March 5, 2024 by David Shama

 

Caitlin Clark is playing basketball in Minneapolis in consecutive weeks. How lucky can we be that the phenom who has become an American household name is back in town for the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament after playing last Wednesday night at a sold-out Williams Arena against the Golden Gophers?

Well, darn lucky if you care about seeing the player recognized by many as the GOAT in the women’s college game and recognize the legacy of the Iowa native whose popularity transcends her sport.  The Iowa Hawkeyes’ scoring machine is a record setter and trailblazer whose status and achievements enhance Women’s History Month which just happens to be in March.

Iowa is the No. 2 seed in the tournament and will play at 5:30 p.m. Friday at Target Center against the winner of Thursday’s Penn State and Wisconsin game.  Clark has led the Hawkeyes to the last two Big Ten Tournament titles.

Over 109,000 fans are expected to watch the five-day tournament that for the first time in 31 years is sold out.  The demand for tickets is no coincidence with Clark making her final tournament appearance before turning pro later in the year.

Clark’s appearances in Minneapolis are a reminder this town and state could have lined up in adoration at Williams Arena for our own phenom, Paige Bueckers.  Clark, a Des Moines area native, came out of high school at Dowling Catholic in 2020 and headed for the University of Iowa.  A five-star prospect, she said no to Notre Dame and other out of state schools.

Paige Bueckers

Bueckers was the No. 1 national recruit in the high school class of 2020, ranked ahead of Clark and everyone else.  She came out of Hopkins High School and said no to the hometown Gophers and seemingly never looked back in choosing the blue-blood Connecticut Huskies whose 11 national championships are the most ever in women’s hoops.  In Bueckers’ freshman season of 2020-2021 she was the most honored female college basketball player in the country, winning five national Player of the Year awards including the Wooden and Naismith.

The purpose in this space isn’t to criticize Bueckers for not choosing her home state school as Clark did.  But she is part of a long line of superb basketball and football players whose college destinations were elsewhere  Basketball’s Khalid El-Amin, Cole Aldrich, Chet Holmgren, Jalen Suggs, Matthew Hurt, Gary Trent and the Jones brothers turned down Minnesota.  Football can count prep superstars who left the state, too, including Joe Alt, Michael Floyd, Seantrel Henderson, Frank Ragnow, Jaxon Howard, James Laurinaitis, Larry Fitzgerald Jr., Steve Walsh and others.

Talent born, raised and nurtured in the state has too often moved on.  A number of factors figure into decision making, but how refreshing if a Minnesota prep phenom said something like this while committing to the Gophers: “You know what? I owe the people in this state something.  Think about the support I received that made me who I am.

“That support goes beyond my parents and coaches.  I am thankful that communities in the state, including mine, invest in the facilities and programs to help young people reach their potential. I know it takes a lot of time, perseverance, and money to build and maintain the kind of culture we have in our state. I am choosing to be a Gopher because I can grow my career and education at the U, and say thank you Minnesota for making me who I am.”

Kids and their parents are going to make decisions based on what they think is best.  This happens all over the country, of course, not just with uber talented Minnesota preps being wooed by a who’s who of college programs.  But it’s admirable when home state loyalty plays a prominent role in making a college choice.  (See last fall’s decision by Esko’s Koi Perich to play football for the Gophers and the buzz it has created).

Loyalty was important to Clark who also counted Iowa State among her final college choices.  At Iowa her dynamic skills have brought national attention unlike any other player in the history of the women’s college game.  Is there anyone on American soil who doesn’t know that Sunday she surpassed Pistol Pete Maravich as college basketball’s all-time leading scorer?  “She is a pistol in pigtails,” Fox’s Gus Johnson raved on national TV Sunday.

Iowans would have loved Clark even if she chose Notre Dame, UConn or some other destination away from the cornfields.  Be assured, though, there is more affection in their hearts because Caitlin stayed home. In an August 2019 story in the Des Moines Register Clark was still undecided about her college choice but said, “…Just staying home and playing in your home state would be a big deal.”

Bueckers grew up a Lindsay Whalen fan, knowing about the former point guard’s accomplishments lifting both the hometown Gophers and Lynx to national glory.  Bueckers had a Whalen poster in her bedroom growing up but said no to Whalen after she became the Gophers head coach in 2018.

Who knows what kind of impact Bueckers in a Gopher uniform might have had on the program?  She had a pop culture following even in high school, with fans coming to watch her play from not just Minnesota but elsewhere.

Almost assuredly her commitment and presence with the Gophers would have attracted talented teammates.  Whalen, who was fired after the 2022-23 season, would likely still be leading the program.

Both Bueckers and Clark are 22-year-old guards who can carry their teams. Clark has shooting range and accuracy never seen before by a woman in the college game.  Bueckers can score but throughout her career at Hopkins and UConn she has often preferred to set up others with timely playmaking.

Bueckers once told Sports Headliners that she has a “God-given ability that I know what I am doing, and I see…plays two steps ahead.”

The two superstars have played collegiately in different conferences but met in 2021 in a Sweet 16 tournament game.  The Huskies defeated the Hawkeyes, 92-72, as Clark was held to 21 points, about six points below her average.  Bueckers had 18 points, nine rebounds and eight assists for UConn.

Their basketball journeys over the years, including being teammates on the US Under-19 national team, have allowed them to become friends. Despite their extraordinary skills and similarities, neither Clark nor Bueckers has won a NCAA championship yet but their teams have been and remain contenders as top 10 teams in March of 2024.

Bueckers was in Minneapolis two years ago this month playing for the NCAA Tournament title. The Huskies lost the title game to South Carolina, 64-49, after a stellar performance by Bueckers led UConn to a double overtime semifinal win over North Carolina State.  In a game for the ages, she scored 27 points including 15 in overtime.

Brian Cosgriff, her high school coach, offered this praise after the semifinal classic: “You could see how Paige was like we’re not going to lose this game. Get on my back. I am going to do what I’ve always done. I am going to carry this team to victory. And that’s what she does.”

Playing in her hometown, Bueckers reminded us how special she could have been for the Gophers. As if we didn’t know.

1 comment

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • …
  • 153
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Most Pressure to Win in This Town? It’s not the WNBA Lynx
  • Vikings & Rodgers Meet Sunday After Off-Season Flirtation
  • J.J. McCarthy Start Prompts Recollection of Bud Grant Wisdom
  • Reactionary Vikings Fans Turn on Team at Home Opener
  • Gophers Football Season Ticket Sales Down Slightly from 2024
  • Vikings Grind But Show They’re Who We Thought They Were
  • U Record Setter Morgan Gushes about New QB Drake Lindsey
  • McCarthy’s Missed Season May Pay Dividends for him in 2025
  • Changing Football Landscape Gives the Gophers a New Spark
  • Wild Contract Sit Down with Kaprizov Coming in September

Newsmakers

  • KEVIN O’CONNELL
  • BYRON BUXTON
  • P.J. FLECK
  • KIRILL KAPRIZOV
  • ANTHONY EDWARDS
  • CHERYL REEVE
  • NIKO MEDVED

Archives

Read More…

  • STADIUMS
  • MEDIA
  • NCAA
  • RECRUITING
  • SPORTS DRAFTS

Get in Touch

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick
© 2025 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme